The topic of this lecture is causality - namely, our awareness of what causes what in the world and why it matters. Though it is basic to human thought, Causality is a notion shrouded in mystery, controversy, and caution, because scientists and philosophers have had difficulties defining when one event TRULY CAUSES another. We all understand that the rooster's crow does not cause the sun to rise, but even this simple fact cannot easily be translated into a mathematical equation.
S. Liberati, S. Sonego, and M. Visser. (2001)cite arxiv:gr-qc/0107091Comment: Plain LaTeX2E; 25 pages; 4 embedded figures (LaTeX pictures). V2: Some discussion clarified, minor rearrangements, references updated, no change in physics conclusions. To appear in Annals of Physics.
J. Brzezinski, C. Sobaniec, and D. Wawrzyniak. Parallel, Distributed and Network-Based Processing, 2004. Proceedings. 12th Euromicro Conference on, page 152 - 158. (11-13 2004)
T. Weise, S. Niemczyk, H. Skubch, R. Reichle, and K. Geihs. Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference (GECCO'08), page 795--802. ACM Press: New York, NY, USA, (2008)
A. Guttormsen. Discussion Paper, D-24/2004. Agricultural University of Norway Discussion Paper, Department of Economics and Resource Management Agricultural University of Norway PO Box 5033, NO-1432 Ås, Norway, (2004)
E. Brucherseifer, P. Bechtel, S. Freyer, and P. Marenbach. Genetic Programming, Proceedings of EuroGP'2001, volume 2038 of LNCS, page 268--279. Lake Como, Italy, Springer-Verlag, (18-20 April 2001)